Hella (band)
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Hella | |
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Spencer Seim live at The Echo, June 22, 2006
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Background information | |
Origin | Sacramento, California, United States |
Genre(s) | Math rock, noise rock, experimental rock |
Years active | 2001–present |
Label(s) | 5 Rue Christine Suicide Squeeze Ipecac |
Associated acts | The Advantage Team Sleep The Holy Smokes The Ladies |
Website | hellaband.com |
Members | |
Zach Hill Spencer Seim Josh Hill Carson McWhirter Aaron Ross |
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Former members | |
Dan Elkan Jonathan Hischke |
Hella is a band from Nevada City, California. They play a technical, Nintendo-influenced blend of math rock, noise rock, and experimental rock. The primary members of the band are Spencer Seim on electric guitar and Zach Hill on drums. In 2005, the band expanded their live band by adding Dan Elkan on vocals, rhythm guitar, and synthesizer and Jonathan Hischke on bass guitar. In 2006, Dan Elkan and Jonathan Hischke left the group. The new line-up includes Josh Hill, Carson McWhirter (of The Advantage), and Aaron Ross.
Contents |
[edit] History
As high school students Spencer Seim and Zach Hill were both members of the NorCal band Legs on Earth along with Josh Hill on guitar and Julian Imsdahl on bass and vocals. The band achieved some moderate local success, becoming renowned for their wild live shows, young age, and Primus-esque sound. The band sounded similar to Primus, especially the vocals and bass but Zach Hill described it in an interview as "Devo, Talking Heads kind of thing".[1] They released one CD in 2001 called Lasers & Saviors on local record label Para-Sight Records, now out of print. In 2001 they went on hiatus and later broke up. Imsdahl is currently in the band Grandstream (formerly known as Little California), and was previously in the band Eraserhead. Hill and Seim decided they wanted to continue playing together and pursue a less mainstream sound. According to Hill, they didn't always intend to remain a duo, though: "[We] had intentions to start a band that was like… kinda like what we were doing with just the two of us, but with more people. But, we couldn't find the other people so we decided to do it just with the two of us."[2] Their name is simply a reference to the slang word "hella" that is common throughout Northern California and has no deeper meaning.[3]
Hella's earliest recording was the self-released Leather Diamond EP, hand-assembled in a nondescript cardboard sleeve and sold at some of their first shows. On March 19, 2002, they debuted proper with the full-length Hold Your Horse Is LP on 5 Rue Christine (a subsidiary of Olympia, Washington-based Kill Rock Stars). The Falam Dynasty 7" was also released that year.
2003 saw Hella begin to deviate from the basic framework in the studio, although their live sound remained largely unchanged. Released on June 17 of that year, Hella's Bitches Ain't Shit But Good People EP (originally a vinyl only release) featured many firsts for the band. An earlier recorded (Leather Diamond) version of a song from their first LP, "Republic of Rough And Ready", became their first widely released song to feature vocals (provided by friend of the band Dan Elkan). A version of "1-800-Ghost-Dance" with vocals by Elkan was available as a downloadable mp3 on the band's website in late 2002. The Bitches EP also found Hella using bass guitar, synthesizer, and drum machine for the first time. Total Bugs Bunny on Wild Bass, also an EP, was released on August 26 and featured the use of synth, sampler, and drum machine and an apparent influence from 8-bit video game music, first hinted at on the opening track of Hold Your Horse Is, "The D. Elkan". Hella rounded out the year with a split live double CD with San Francisco, California-based band Dilute.
Hella released their second full-length LP in 2004, The Devil Isn't Red. Other releases for the year included a split 7" (with Four Tet) and a limited edition, Japan-only release of the three-song Acoustics EP.
For their 2005 release, Hella again experimented with their sound in the studio. Church Gone Wild/Chirpin Hard, released through Suicide Squeeze Records, is a double-solo album, with Zach Hill and Seim each recording a whole disc's worth of material independent of each other. Hill's disc, Church Gone Wild, is a 56-minute noise piece which featured Zach doing all the vocals and instruments, save for a few guest appearances; while Seim's disc, Chirpin Hard, again experiments with the fusion of 8-bit Nintendo music with punk and math rock. Hella also expanded their live band to a quartet in 2005, adding Dan Elkan on vocals, rhythm guitar, and synthesizer, and Jonathan Hischke on bass guitar in order to play songs from Total Bugs Bunny on Wild Bass and Church Gone Wild/Chirpin Hard live, in most cases for the first time. This line-up toured the US in support of Out Hud in Spring, System of a Down, The Mars Volta, Les Claypool, and Dillinger Escape Plan in the fall as well as numerous headlining dates in the U.S. as well as visits to Japan, Spain and the UK.
A DVD/CD EP release titled Concentration Face/Homeboy was released on November 8, 2005 on 5RC Records.[4]
As of 2006, Hella consists of Spencer Seim, Zach Hill, Hill's cousin Josh (who also played in Legs on Earth), Seims's Advantage bandmate Carson McWhirter, and Aaron Ross. The first release from this line-up, entitled There's No 666 in Outer Space, was released on January 30, 2007 on Ipecac Recordings.
[edit] Side projects
In addition to their work in Hella, Seim and Zach Hill have also recorded with a number of side projects.
Seim plays drums in NES theme music cover band called The Advantage (a reference to the NES Advantage controller), notable for using only guitar, bass guitar, and drums to replicate the 8-bit programmed music of the games.
Hill has recorded albums with Tough Guy Fantasy/Arctic Boys, Flössin, Crime in Choir, Nervous Cop (with drummer Greg Saunier of Deerhoof and harpist Joanna Newsom), Friend/Enemy (with Tim Kinsella, Sam Zurick, Todd Mattei, Jim Becker, Graeme Gibson, Emma Grace Lansangan, Nick Marci, Chris Powell, Azita Youssefi), Zach Hill and the Holy Smokes (whose first release was accompanied by a 138-page book written and illustrated by Hill), as well as playing drums for Chino Moreno's band Team Sleep, The Ladies, Kenseth Thibideau and Marty Anderson's band Howard Hello and Jeordie White and Chris Goss's band Goon Moon. More recently, Hill has teamed up with Mick Barr from Octis and Orthrelm and together have released the LPs Shred Earthship on 5 Rue Christine and Volume 2 on the Austrian label Rock Is Hell. Volume 2 consists of the two longest tracks from the Shred Earthship sessions.
[edit] Discography
[edit] Albums
- Hold Your Horse Is (2002), 5 Rue Christine
- The Devil Isn't Red (2004), 5 Rue Christine
- Church Gone Wild/Chirpin' Hard (2005), Suicide Squeeze
- There's No 666 in Outer Space (2007), Ipecac Recordings
[edit] EPs
- Leather Diamond (2001)
- Falam Dynasty (2002), 5 Rue Christine
- Bitches Ain't Shit but Good People (2003), Suicide Squeeze
- Total Bugs Bunny on Wild Bass (2003), Narnack Records
- Concentration Face/Homeboy (2005), 5 Rue Christine
- Acoustics (2004), Toad Records/5 Rue Christine
[edit] Split Releases
- live split with Dilute (2003) Sick Room Records, LTD
- split with Four Tet (2004), Ache Records
[edit] References
- ^ Sacramento Underground Music
- ^ Maylone, Sean. "Hella is not big band jazz, but neither are you", Fish Rap Live!, 10 March 2005.
- ^ Then It Must Be True - Hella
- ^ KRS Complete Discography